Sandy Wood
Brain Game: Re-cursive
by Sandy Wood - November 24, 2008 - 7:30 AM

THE SOLUTION:

“text.” When written in cursive, you have to add short lines for the x and both t‘s.

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Comments (14)
  1. e-x-i-t

  2. text! I knew there’d be 2 T’s… tricky one on the X.

  3. Yea! I got that one right away!

  4. Close, Joe, but the “i” has a dot instead of a line.

  5. My name requires too much work to write in cursive..night be why my signature is a god-awful mess

  6. This is true only in some styles of cursive. In Italic, for example, you are supposed to lift your pencil or pen from the page and cross the t immediately after making the stem of the t. However, this is certainly not the standard form of cursive taught in schools in the U.S. (although I think it should be).

  7. I always feel so special when I can figure these out. I liked this one a lot!

  8. If you have to lift your pen immediately, doesn’t that sort of defeat the purpose of cursive writing? I guess if you are looking for a more pleasing style visually that makes sense, but I always thought of it as an efficiency thing…I guess that is why I am an engineer.

    Anywho, I prefer cursive speak rather than cursive writing…&@^^#$

  9. What about t-u-f-t?
    I guess it might not count since you can cross the ‘f’ and the ‘t’ with the same line

  10. Actually, the letter f does not need a line in cursive. It is also the only letter to extend above AND below the lines on those wierd papers they give you in elementary school.

  11. Nick, in cursive you do not cross your f’s.

  12. I had to write the alphabet in cursive in order to get this right – before I did it I was sure there would be an “f” in the word.

  13. The way I was taught handwriting, you do not have to go back for the x’s. When I write x’s, it looks like I’m writing a backwards lower-case c followed by taking my pen off the paper for a moment and then creating a frontwards c that connects to the backwards one.

  14. They way I was taught was that a “t” at the end of the word is not required to be crossed. However, the arc is reversed from the normal ending of a word. Like going from 9 to 12 o’clock on a circle.

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